visitors

Thursday, 9 April 2009

Melting snow

''It's snowing. let's make a snowman!"
everyone came out to make a snowman.

''I want to make the head." said Tom.

"I want to make the body," said Joe.

Everyone helped to make the snowman.It got bigger and bigger.

The sun came out and the snow began to melt.

Our snowman got smaller and smaller.

The rain came down and more snow melted.

Our snowman got smaller and smaller.

Our snowman melted away.Everyone was sad.

Mum made some new snowmen. They were smaller than our snowman.

Everyone got a little snowman. They all melted away!

Monday, 6 April 2009

word to spell

here

Set 1
(Words with the short /a/ sound)



Week 1: am, an, as, at, ax

Week 2: cat, rat, sat, mat, hat

Week 3: bad, mad, pad, sad, lad

Week 4: cap, map, nap, tap, sap

Week 5: bag, wag, tag, rag, gag

Week 6: can, fan, pan, ran, van

Week 7: jam, ham, ram, yam, tam

Week 8: (choose 20 of the previous words to informally test, 4 per day)



time

wawa knows from one o'clock

until twelve o'clock

What Are the Basics of How to Tell a Story?

from here http://www.funfelt.com/storytelling-basics.html

There are commonalities in all Fairy Tales:

  1. “Once Upon a Time”
  2. A problem or conflict
  3. A solution
  4. The number “3”
  5. “Happily Ever After”

Storytelling Tips:

  • Keep your stories simple and short (10-15 min.)

  • Use eye contact, voice inflection, and facial expression as much as possible.

  • Dramatic pauses are wonderful! You will always get a reaction from your audience!

  • Have the children be part of your storytelling process! Use them to do gestures, put pieces on the felt board, make sounds, do dramatic actions and movements, etc.

  • Relax, breathe, and play! It’s a fun game that everyone wants to play with you!

  • Tell stories in your own words! Just remember a few lines of the plot and feel free to let them come out differently. Inform the children before you begin that you are the Storyteller and they may hear a story that may be a little different from what they have heard before. Let your imagination work. That’s what will create magic, not your fears of memory!

  • If you get stuck, simply describe the details of sounds, colors, smells, clothes, atmosphere etc. to make up time. This is a psychological trick because it stimulates your imagination and mental imageswhich are the best ways to trigger your memory. In oral storytelling there are no mistakes! Nobody knows what you are going to say!

about dot com video

go here

http://video.about.com/childparenting/Teaching-Clocks-to-Kids.htm

various people asking the time



  • A) What's the time?



  • B) What time is it?


  • C)
    Have you got the time by any chance?


  • D) Do you have the time, please?



  • E)
    Sorry, could you tell me the time, please?


  • F )
    What's the time please?


  • G)
    Do you know what the time is?




tell time


Tell the times below, click on the arrow to see the possible answers:




























Wednesday, 1 April 2009

Tell the Time in English

go here

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3icBxO6Wjz0&feature=related

clock learning

Ticktock Minutes: Seconds, Minutes, Hours, Days

Telling Time

Wheels on the Bus - Babies on the Bus

Wheels on the Bus- Full Song

Learn Guitar- Wheels on the Bus- Full Song

The Clock Song

The Clock Song
Tune: The Wheels on the Bus


The hands on the clock go round and round,
Round and round, round and round.
The hands on the clock go round and round,
To tell us the time.


The short hand on the clock
Goes from number to number,
Number to number, number to number.
The short hand on the clock
Goes from number to number,
To tell us the hour.


The long hand on the clock
Goes around by fives,
Around by fives, around by fives.
The long hand on the clock
Goes around by fives,
To tell us the minutes.


The hands on the clock go round and round,
Round and round, round and round.
The hands on the clock go round and round,
To tell us the time.

Learning How To Tell Time... The Unschooling Way

by Miranda Hughes

Learning to Tell Time the Unschooling Way

http://www.ontariohomeschool.org/telltime.html

thomas clock

Analog Clock Math Online Games

Analog Clock Math Online Games



Move the Hands


What Time is It?


Stop the Clock


Match the Clocks

http://www.time-for-time.com/swf/myclox.swf

handy online clock
This is EXCELLENT !!!


lessons and games

Also try this site - the clock stuff is way down under measurement.

nlvm.usu.edu/en/nav/grade_g_1.html


http://www.squidoo.com/telling-time
visit here very detail

How to teach a six year old to tell time

How to teach a six year old to tell time

Step1
Show the child how to draw out a clock face. Have him put clock numbers around the paper plate, then fill in dashes to represent the individual minutes.
Step2
Make an hour hand and fasten it in the middle of the paper plate.
Step3
Show the child how to tell time when the hour hand is on the number. This step should be pretty easy.
Step4
Show them how to tell time if the hour hand is in front of the number. Show him several different times on the clock and have him tell him what the hour is.
Step5
Make a construction paper minute hand and attach it on to the clock.
Step6
Teach the kid how to tell time when the minute hand is on one of the big numbers. Once the six-year-old knows to multiply the number the minute hand is on by 5, add the hour hand back in.
Step7
Teach the child to tell time when the minute hand is between the big numbers. To do this, she has to multiply the big number by 5 and add the number of dashes past that number to the minute.